
Imagine the people, weary from rebuilding a broken city and even more broken hearts. As Ezra read the Law, their eyes welled up with tears—not only from conviction, but perhaps also from remembering how far they'd drifted. Nehemiah’s response is striking: he doesn’t tell them to mourn longer. He tells them to rejoice, because God is with them.
Joy is not the absence of hardship; it’s the presence of hope. It’s the quiet confidence that God is still working—even in rubble, even in repentance, even in weariness. As parents, as believers, as leaders, our journey will have valleys. But the Lord invites us to draw strength from joy, not just grit our way through.
There’s joy in seeing God work slowly. There’s joy in your child learning a lesson you've prayed for. There’s joy in the laughter at the dinner table after a hard day. These glimpses are reminders: joy is both a gift and a strength.
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